I’m very impressed by independent businesses making a go of it at all – see Audio Damage, for instance, who have built unique stuff with a liberal licensing scheme. The software business is tough – plain and simple. The light of hope here, as noted in comments: sound designers were already working on Alchemy 2, meaning a new developer may take over the new synth. Without any information, everything else is speculation. Assets may have been otherwise liquidated – as in, possibly sold to another developer. (Making it open source is often simply not an option proprietary software often builds on proprietary libraries – or was simply never intended to be developed in an open environment.)Ģ. Licensing issues may prevent them from giving away the software. There are two main scenarios here that could explain the fate of the software itself (inevitably, people do wonder if a company ceases operation whether their software will be made available free):ġ. Those downloads are available now and it appears won’t be around forever.
#CAMEL AUDIO ALCHEMY 1.55 TORRENT HOW TO#
We recommend you download all of your purchases and back them up so that you can continue to use them (Instructions: How to Download and Backup Your Products). We will continue to provide downloads of your previous purchases and email support until July 7, 2015. We would like to thank you for the support we’ve received over the years in our efforts to create instruments and effects plug-ins and sound libraries.Ĭamel Audio’s plug-ins, Alchemy Mobile IAPs and sound libraries are no longer available for purchase. But their software hasn’t seen updates in some time, and today customers were greeted with a bare-bones site that presented only basic support options and a login. Camel Audio have long been a favorite name in plug-in instruments and effects, as makers of CamelSpace, CamelPhat, the Alchemy sample manipulation instrument.